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Performance and the Classroom: Part 1—My First (Misconceived) Effort

Posted on December 24, 2013 by David Rhoads

I got the idea to incorporate performance into the classroom from the choir director at Carthage College. I went to the annual concert of the choir, a magnificent Christmas concert held each year in December. The concert was repeated several times on the weekend and drew thousands of people from the college and from the area.

As always, I was awed by the quality of the student performances….

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Filed Under: Mentor Tagged With: Carthage College, Christmas, classroom, david rhoads, experiential learning, John Windh, Jterm, performance, Performance and the Classroom Series

The Instructor’s Double Standard

Posted on December 9, 2013 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

Teachers have a lot of power over students in the classroom. Typically, we write the syllabus, decide the rules, make rulings on infractions. In turn, we are accountable to our institutions, as instructors and also regarding our many non-teaching obligations. In conversations, I frequently brush up against the reality of The Instructor’s Double Standard, here defined as any instance when an instructor holds students to a standard to which she does not hold herself, or to which she is not held by the institution…

 

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Filed Under: Curator Tagged With: assessment, classroom, culture, G. Brooke Lester, privilege, project-based learning, syllabus

Posing Questions—Part III: Nourishing Great Questions

Posted on November 8, 2013 by David Rhoads

How can we create a hospitable atmosphere in which question-asking is an integral and valued part of the classroom experience for students and teachers alike?

Maybe we need to be absolutely clear that we actually, really, honestly do want questions! To try and generate an atmosphere hospitable for questions, I have sometimes said, “You may have had a bad experience in the past asking questions in class. But I want you to know I welcome them. I know you may feel they expose what you do not know. But that is the whole point of learning. . . .

 

 

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Filed Under: Mentor Tagged With: answer, asking good questions, classroom, curiousity, david rhoads, fear, hospitality, Posing Questions Series, provocation, question, safe questions

Posing Questions—Part II: Teaching Curiousity

Posted on October 28, 2013 by David Rhoads

Perhaps curiosity is a character trait that cannot be taught. But maybe it can be picked up by example or contagion or osmosis. You see someone who is fascinated with things and loves to investigate them, and you are just drawn to imitate that person….

 

 

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Filed Under: Mentor Tagged With: answer, asking good questions, classroom, curiousity, david rhoads, fear, hospitality, Posing Questions Series, Postman and Weingarten, provocation, question, safe questions, Teaching as a Subversive Activity

Scarcities 1: Desanctifying the Classroom (1 of 2)

Posted on October 21, 2013 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

There was a time–remember?–when the face-to-face classroom wasn’t a sacrosanct wing, protected by Do-Not-Touch velvet ropes, in the Higher Ed Nostalgia Museum. A time–though to admit it now may seem tantamount to waving the white flag of pedagogical surrender to the advancing corporate-MOOC Visigoth hoards–when we educators used complain about the classroom.

Cari Lyn writes recently on Seminarium Blog about open-source “learning management systems” (LMSes) as one affordable approach to learning platforms, in which students can have opportunities for “[g]roup activities, research opportunities, and freedom of expression.” This has me reflecting on platforms: the face-to-face classroom, the closed LMSes, and the open/distributed platforms. Conversations about learning platforms tend to emphasize the “goods” of the face-to-face platform and the challenges of the online platforms. But before we had online learning platforms to be suspicious about, we used to complain about the limits of the classroom all the time.

So, in this post, I focus on the limits of the face-to-face classroom in terms of “scarcities.” In a second post, I will consider the respective “scarcities” of the closed and open online platforms. This will, I argue, provide a less skewed, more productive basis for comparing platforms or for considering “blended” solutions. So, let’s get started: What’s missing–necessarily, intrinsically missing–from the brick-and-mortar classroom…?

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Filed Under: Curator Tagged With: classroom, G. Brooke Lester, LMS, MOOCs, Moodle, open learning, platforms, Scarcities Series

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